Honalo: The Hawaiian Town That Time Forgot
Honalo is true
Old Hawaii. No, really. Not New, Tourist-Laden, Sad, Dirty, Smeared Hawaii, but
old Hawaii, back when it was a place where you could go to be
warm and live in a
tin-roofed shack with no doors and forget about the outside world. It's a beautiful little
one-bar town in a stunning tropical setting about halfway up the slope of
Mount Kilauea on the
Big Island, running in a strip of stores and homes on either side of
Highway 11. If you want to see some of what Hawaii used to be, come visit Honalo. It's my favorite place on the Big Island, bar none. I was last there in
September of
2000. While you're there, I recommend the following:
Teshima's
Teshima's alone would be reason to come to Honalo.
The first great thing about Teshima's is this: You will not find better Japanese food. Anywhere. Ever. Try the tempura. Try the teryaki. Try the sushi. It's all good. Perfectly reasonable prices, especially for Hawaii.
The second great thing about Teshima's is the ambiance and decor. It fits with the rest of Honalo -- sleepy, expatriate, serious South Pacific ambiance, heavy dose of '30s and '40s nostalgia. Beautiful. Suprisingly good place to bring a date.
The third great thing about Teshima's is that it is still run by the original Mama Teshima, who will come out to your table and be cheerful, grandmotherly and try to give you free food. She founded the restaurant with her husband in 1941. That has to be the worst time to start a Japanese restaurant ever. We should count ourselves fortunate that Teshima's is still with us. Fortunately her polite, friendly, efficient children and grandchildren have taken over day-to-day operations of the (sizable) restaurant, so we can feel secure knowing that Teshima's will be with us for many years to come.
The Aloha Theater
This beautiful old
movie theater shows fine
independent and
foreign films. It's a well-kept secret that people from all over the
Big Island -- and in my case, off it -- turn out to visit. It shares
lobby space with a pleasant restaurant (nice
lanai, views of the sea far down the volcano slope) and an eminently
forgettable souvenir shop.
The Aloha's tin roof adds to its charm, and the sound of rain on said roof adds a suprising dimension to the movie-watching experience, making it all seem more tropical. I watched Tea with Mussolini there and did not find the rain on the roof distracting, despite the fact that it was occasionally quite loud.
Shopping
There are some very fine
clothing,
furniture and
antique stores in
Honalo. They often feature fine
hardwoods of suspicious extraction (I bought a piece of furniture for my parents' 33rd
anniversary that, I'm reasonably certain, was smuggled out of
Bali). The store owners are friendly, personable, and content to chat with you all day. They often have
attractive and
intelligent young women behind the counters, who are only too happy to have
dashing young adventurers tell them stories of their travels around the
globe, and take them out for a drink after they get off work. Mwa ha ha. Speaking of which...
Bars and Nightlife
Well, there isn't much, to be honest, but what there is -- it's worth a visit. There is only one visible bar in Honalo, the name of which escapes the author despite having spent several
happy, drunken nights playing
pool there with the
locals. If you want to escape the other tourists and mix with some
real people with interesting stories and lives as bizarre and varied as your own worldly experience, go out for a drink in Honalo. The locals are friendly, they'll invite you to join them for a drink or a game of pool. I went in for a brief
pint of
beer one afternoon and ended up staying all night.
How To Get There
Honalo is easy to find. Just take
Highway 11 from
Kailua-Kona towards
Kealakekua and you'll eventually see Teshima's (which marks the border of the town) on your left. There is a
bus service which travels from Kona to Honalo, as well as
taxis, but on the
Big Island hitch-hiking is suprisingly
safe and very, very easy -- I never had to wait for more than one or two cars to go by before being picked up. Admittedly there is no guarantee that your driver will speak the same language as you -- I had to think
real fast to remember enough
college Spanish to get by in one case...
Come To Honalo
Come and enjoy this beautiful little town. It is a perfect, peaceful example of what the Big Island of Hawaii was like before it became a famous
tourist destination.
This node is part of the E2 Tourist Guide and its associated Quest.